Aaron Pynenberg wrote:
An interesting story quick, (which is related) I was giving a demo at Lanzefest in New Glarus WI, when two women who happened to be Amish, (The Amish are a religious sect, that believe in nothing modern) approached me and talked for awhile about swords etc...but when the two asked to hold on to my sword she reached out and took ahold of it, and that's when I saw those huge, defined, unbelievable forearm and hand muscles-I am telling you, I am no slouch but she was freakin me out man, she probably could have choked the blank out of me if she wanted too- there is no substitute for the strength gained from manual labor, although very hard on the body over the years-still pretty hard to beat-
This was one post too many about the strength that comes from labor, rather than exercise, so I have to chip in my two cents.
I agree that there's something "extra" gained from labor that exercise misses - range of motion (and repetition?), maybe? You lift heavy things, move them in awkward ways, do real movements with real objects of various shapes and weights all day long...I suspect you get something out of it that exercise can only duplicate with difficulty. Maybe the difference between training and doing? Maybe just emphasis (I've been doing moderate manual labor for a year now after several years of a sedentary lifestyle and my forearms, middle and lower back are like rocks, my torso, upper arms and upper back not so much - would I have emphasized my forearms so much in a balanced workout? But that's obviously what I needed to get my job done...)